Meet Squadron Leader Priya Sharma: The Woman Who Took a Historic Sortie With the Indian Air Force Chief

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Squadron Leader Priya Sharma

On a landmark day for Indian military aviation, Chief of the Air Staff Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh strapped into a MiG-21 at Nal Air Force Station, Bikaner, for ceremonial send-off sorties and flying in formation with him was Sqn Ldr Priya Sharma, one of the Indian Air Force’s trailblazing women fighter pilots. The moment captured the end of an era for the MiG-21 and the continuing rise of women in India’s combat cockpits.

What exactly happened at Nal and why it mattered

With the final two MiG-21 squadrons weeks away from formal retirement, the IAF Chief flew tribute sorties at Nal AFS, marking the jet’s last operational missions after six decades of service. According to multiple reports, he flew alongside Sqn Ldr Priya Sharma, placing a spotlight on both the aircraft’s storied legacy and the new generation of pilots now shaping the force. A formal farewell ceremony is scheduled for late September at Chandigarh, where the MiG-21 first joined IAF service in 1963.

Squadron Leader Priya Sharma

A quick primer on the MiG-21’s farewell

The MiG-21 has been the backbone of the IAF since the 1960s, flown in conflicts from 1965 and 1971 to Kargil (1999) and beyond. The Bison upgrade extended its life, but the type is finally giving way to newer platforms, including the indigenous Tejas Mk-1A. Reports from the day highlighted both the nostalgia and the forward-looking transition now underway.

Who is Sqn Ldr Priya Sharma?

Priya Sharma first came to national attention in December 2018 when she passed out of the Air Force Academy, Dundigal, becoming India’s 7th woman fighter pilot and the third from Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu district. Coverage at the time noted her engineering background (B.Tech from IIIT-Kota) and the influence of her father, an IAF air warrior, on her decision to fly fighters.

Why her presence in this sortie is historic

  • Symbolism at a pivotal handover: Sharing airspace with the Air Chief during the MiG-21’s operational farewell underlined the service’s evolution: honoring an icon while showcasing the cohort of women who now hold fighter streams.
  • A visible role model for aspirants: Sharma’s journey from the 2018 passing-out parade to flying with the CAS offers a powerful, public example for girls considering military aviation. Her early interviews expressed a dream to fly the MiG-21; seven years later, she helped mark its goodbye.
Squadron Leader Priya Sharma

The MiG-21: a legacy in numbers

Over roughly six decades of Indian service, the MiG-21 fleet saw multiple upgrades and thousands of sorties, participating in every major air campaign. Publicly reported figures often cited during the farewell also note a difficult safety record over the type’s long tenure. The IAF’s transition plan now emphasizes steady induction of newer platforms to rebuild squadron strength.

What this means for women in the fighter stream

The IAF’s first three women fighter pilots were commissioned in 2016; by late 2018, Priya Sharma became the seventh. Eight years on, women’s visibility in operational events like the MiG-21 farewell underscores normalization rather than exception. For cadets entering now, the path Sharma helped illuminate is broader and the cockpits more diverse than at any time in IAF history.

Quick Profile: Sqn Ldr Priya Sharma (At a Glance)

Field Detail
Stream Fighters (IAF)
First national spotlight Commissioned Dec 2018; 7th woman fighter pilot in India
Education B.Tech (IIIT-Kota), training at AFA Dundigal & AF Stn Hakimpet (reported)
Hometown/roots Jhunjhunu district, Rajasthan
Family Father served in the IAF
Notable moment Flew in formation during the IAF Chief’s MiG-21 farewell sorties at Nal AFS, Aug 2025


MiG-21 Farewell: Key Facts

  • Final operational missions: Conducted from Nal AFS, Bikaner; ceremonial de-induction slated in September at Chandigarh.
  • Service length: About 60+ years with IAF; among the world’s most-produced supersonic fighters.
  • Transition plan: Fleet replacement centers on HAL Tejas Mk-1A and future inductions.

Final word

The image of Sqn Ldr Priya Sharma taking to the sky alongside the Chief of the Air Staff on the MiG-21’s swansong day will endure for two reasons: it salutes a jet that defined generations of Indian fighter aviation and it celebrates the pilots who will define the next.

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25 comments

MIG 12 played its role, ladies joining the Defence Forces is a great achievement worth a applause but please our Air Force needs to be equipped with better and modern 5th Gen fighter jets, neglect during past decade has led to our Airforce operating only with 29 squadrons after all the MIG 21s retire while the sanctioned strength of squadrons is 42 squadrons, and hardly anything is in the horizon / pipe line to equip more squadrons while we face two adversarial countries.

Vinod Topa

A Great day. Feel proud, Priya Sharma Flying with Air Chief Marshall AP Singh Sir. Hale Indian Airforce

Sqn Ldr Gulzar Singh Mathauda

It is a great moment for a lady pilot to fly Mig21 with the Air Chief Marshall is geat achievement and a matter of proud, God bless her and we are all also proud of her.

Ram Prakash Malhota

it’s a memorable moment for an individual as well as for the IAF..let’s IAF to Soar high.

Subal Das, Ex-Sgt.

A proud moment for all the Indians. Sqd.Ldr.Priya Sharma will be an inspiration for all girls. Best wishes for her.

Arun Kumar R Pillai

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